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g?jKr*.r tMCTIi STOCKHOLDERS DISTBUST JEBBBE Offer to Relieve Him of the Trouble of Getting at Looters. MANY CHARGES ARE FILED !Tlie Suggestion of William F. King, ' of the Protective Committee, Tliat He Be Permitted to Provide Spceial Prosecutor Ptefusrd. New York City. ? Seemingly behoving District Attorney Jerome was icither unable or unwilling to nrosebutc the Metropolitan traction grafters and looters, William F. King, former president of the Merchants' Association and head of the firm of Calhoun, Robbins & Co., and his associates on the Metropolitan Stockholders* Protective Committee Went before the Grand Jury and made Ihe proposition that they be authorized to conduct the traction investigation through their own lawyers, hv the Dowers of the Grand 3ury and the District Attorney's Dffice. Jerome rejected this unprecedented proposition, the makers of which were led by a man who had been as prominent as any other in reelecting Jerome. King has said openly Jerome was not "making good" on his ante-election promises. If rumor be true, he told Jerome practically the same thing in the presence of the Grand Jurors. One element which makes King feel so keenly the failure of Jerome to bring the traction looters to book is that King collected from friends when Jerome was running for re-election large amounts for Jerome's campaign fund. He assured those friends Jerome would "make good." The understanding is that it was to "make King put up or shut up" that Jerome had him and his associates before the Grand Jury. They admitted frankly they had no positive proof crime had been committed. They insisted, however, it existed, and it was Jerome's duty to get it and to prosecute the offenders. King was before the Grand Jury ninety minutes. When he emerged he was agitated and seemed on the verge of collapse. It had been his Intention to tell outside everything he had said to the Grand Jurors, frhey warned him not to do so, and he heeded the warning. Neither he nor his associates were sworn before they were questioned. Jerome was present. He had with him several assistants. The District Attorney deemed the situation so important he even broke away from the Thaw trial. It was only after spirited discussion that Franklin Pierce, of counsel, for the committee, was permitted to enter the Grand Jury room. Eugene S. Kramer, another lawyer, was excluded. Besides King, the witnesses ex aminea were George u. uegeuciui, William Maas, Nathan H. Hyman and Isaac Blum. Before any of the men were called the Special Grand Jury had before it a communication sent to the body and to Mr. Jerome by the committee. In this the committee offered to procure, at its own expense, evidence of crimes connected with the management of the Metropolitan system. The proposition made in a letter by the Stockholders' Protective Committee to take charge of the prosecution of the traction looters reviewed much testimony already made public. The committee said rejection of the proposition would be construed to mean the District Attorney had no heart in such a prosecution and that the committee would meet with ob Btructions. ine leuer aiso criucisea Jerome severely for compelling the committee to appear. Assertion was made that millions of persons in New York and vicinity believed the officers and directors of the Metropolitan have wrecked the railway to their own advantage, and that such men of great wealth could not be punished lor their crimes. The King committee asserts the crimes of forgery in the third degree, conspiracy, the crime of paying dividends out of capital, grand larceny and lalse statements have been com mitted. Mr. King was armed with a carefully prepared statement from which he read to the Grand Jury that the funds of the Metropolitan Street Railway Company had been wasted and stolen and the accounts falsified to conceal the operations of some of its dishonest directors and officers. He read that Mr. Jerome was in possession of statements of expert accountants, showing, as he admitted of +Vi q ' + i m a IrrotriilnHHps nnrl crimes. Yet no one was prosecuted and the books were returned to the company. The Grand Jury, It is understood, after Mr. King had been subjected to AMAZING COST OF CR Estimated by Missouri Attorney to E or $25 Annually to Ei Jefferson City, Mo.?The annual now more than $200,000,000 a year pleted by Thomas Speed Mosby, Miss public here: MIf we consider also the well knc classes generally," says Mr. Mosby, " of crime up to fully $500,000,000 a y< who is th? head of a family is obliged account, and the per capita cost of cr ? cost of education. "According to the most reliable every 320 persons in the United Sta criminal, and our degenerate popula than the national capital." Hatpin's Scratch Kills Her. Mrs. Martha Bowne, whose home was near Columbus, N. J., pricked one of her fingers with a black hatpin several weeks ago. No attention was paid to the wound and it was not \ thought serious until blood poisoning developed, of which she died. , Scarlet Fever Books Burned. The Minneapolis Board of Eduction burned 750 text-books in two schools, to prevent the spread of scarlet fever. Abont Noted People. Dr. John G. Schurman, president of Cornell University, is opposed to the elective principle college.' The late Lord Kelvin was as thrif ty as he was scientific, tor ne ien an estate valued at $5,000,000. Robert S. McCormick, to whom the Emperor of Japan has sent the decoration of the Order of the Rising Sun, ts a well known Chicagoan. The appointment of Baron Takahira to succeed Viscount Aoki as Japanese Ambassador to the United States is greatly appreciat?d in Washington, D. C. a searching cross-examination by DIs- | trict Attorney Jerome, declined to accept his proposition to substitute a private prosecutor for the public pros- I ecutor. and called unon Mr. King and the members of the Stockholders' Committee to produce evidence ia i annnnrt. nf f.he rhareres alleeed. I JUDGE FLAYS JEROME FOR ACTS BEFORE GRAND JURY New York City.?Practically accusing District Attorney Jerome of willfui intent to evade the law and to mislead the Grand Jury, Judge Rosalsky, in General Sessions, dismissed the contempt proceedings which Jerome had brought against Paul D. Cravath, counsel for Thomas F. Ryan. Cravath had refused to tell the Grand Jury what had passed between him and Ryan in connection with the sale of the Wall and Cortlandt Street Ferries Railway Company's franchises to the Metropolitan Securities Company by Anthony N. Brady through William C. Whitney. By that transaction about $715,000 in excess of the amount Brady, charged for the franchises was drawn from the treasury of the Metropolitan Securities Company and divided up among Whitney, Ryan, P. A. B. Widftner. William L. Elkins. Thomas Dolan and Moore & Schley, bankers. The bankers said the amount they received was used to wipe out an indebtedness which was on their books against Whitney. Cravath refused to tell the Grand Jury anything about the conversations which had passed between him and Ryan in relation to that deal. He contended the communications were confidential as between counsel and client. A rule to show cause why he should not be punished for contempt was issued against him, and the president of the American Bar Association and the president of the New York State Bar Association appeared in his defense. Judge Rosalsky upholds the contention of Cravath and his lawyers, and in doing so deals to Jerome such a scoring as perhaps no other District Attorney ever received from the bench. He intimates, seemingly, that Jerome's general intent was to have invalid indictments found against Thomas F. Ryan, who seemingly was the criminal in the case, if there was any criminal. Not only that, but he discharges the Grand Jury from further consideration of the case because of the doubtful validity of Jerome's entire procedure. To repair the damage he says Jerome has done, Judge Rosalsky directs that a new Grand Jury shail take hold of the case, and expresses the hope the District Attorney in this new proceeding will find the guilty person or persons. In view of Judge Rosalsky's excoriation of District Attorney Jerome for the manner in which he conducted the examination of Thomas P. Ryan before the Grand Jury, on which the prosecution failed to secure an indictment, the removal of Jerome la demanded. The New York World, Democratic, which supported Jerome in the recent election, says: "Conduct like this on the part of a District Attorney warrants his instant removal." The New York Press, Republican, which also supported Jerome, says: "On the showing made by the couit alone Jerome is proved to be unfit for t\e office of public prosecutor." Ryan and Others Sned For Nearly Three Millions. New York City.?Charging Thomas F. Ryan, Peter A. B. Widener, Thos. Dolan, John D. Crimmins, Thomas P. I Fowler, Paul D. Cravath, H. H. Vree land, Edward J. Berwind, George G. Haven and Edward W. Sayre with fraud, conspiracy and breach of trust, suit was begun against them and against the old Metropolitan Securities Company in the United States Circuit Court by Adrian H. Joline and Douglas Robinson, receivers for the New York City Railway Company, to recover $2,797,200. MISS VANDERBILT A COUNTESS. The Bride of Count Laslo Szechenyi, Chamberlain to Austrian Emperor. New York City.?Miss Gladys Vanderbilt, youngest daughter of the late Cornelius Vanderbilt, was married at the Vanderbilt residence, 1 West 'KMft'o'.tiovonth street, to Count Laszlo Szechenyi of Hungary, Chamberlain to the Austrian Emperor and Lieutenant of Hussars and member of an ancient family. The ceremony was of the simplest character, and waa witnessed by more than 400 relatives and friends of the two families. As the bride and bridegroom stood in a grotto of mauve orchids and tall palm trees, while Mgr. Lavelle, of St. Patrick's Cathedral, united them, about 2000 American men and women crowded the streets surrounding the Vanderbilt home and jostled the policemen in their efforts to get close to the building. From the windows or i the Savoy, Netherland and Plazq 1 Hotels hundreds of curious persons gazed at the house in which the wedding was taking place [ME IN UNITED STATES. 5e More Than $200,000,000 a Year /ery Head of a Family. I cost of crime in the United States is i , according to estimates recently comouri State Pardon Attorney, and made >wn non-productiveness of the criminal this would bring the estimated burden sar. Every honest man in this country to pay not less than $25 a year on this ime is much more than the per capita sources of information, about one in les is euner a pauper, a mnatiu or a | ition alone would make a city larger PENSIONS, $150,000,000. Increase of $7,000,000 Planned Foi Next Fiscal Year. Washington,?. G.?Representative Keifer, of Ohio, chairman of the subcommittee on pensions of the House Committee on Appropriations, announced informally that that committee has agreed to recommend a pension roll of $150,000,000 for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1909. This will be about $7,000,000 in excass of the pension roll of the present fiscal year. ITALIANS COMING BACK. Five Thousand Will Leave Genoa aud | Naples in Few Weeks. Rome.?The return to Italy of emigrants from the United States is crrariiiniiv stonmne. while emigration O*"" 4 l wr _ to the United States is being resumed Steamers leaving Genoa and Naples before the end of the month will take back to America at least 5000 emigrants. Jesup Left Million to Museum. The will of Morris K. Jesup left $1,000,000 to the American Museum of Natural History. f 0 ALL IS NOT GOLD ? wjr*- 4 Wedding Breakfast Menu: ?Week's cleverest cartoon, by CONGRESSMAN RIDICULES THE HEIRESSES WHO ' McGavin, of Chicago, Says They Sacrific Block of Fifth Avenue?"Oh, Mamma is Done, in McGavin's View?Eve: York, Whether For a Yard of R Washington, D. C.?Declaring that ei the women concerned "sacrifice their C souls and their honor on the altar of It snobbery and vice," Representative tc Charles McGavin, of Chicago, took s< occasion in the House to denounce ai "the international marriage habit" on tl the part of American heiresses. It tl was only a few days ago that Repre- ci sentative Sabath, of Chicago, Intro- fi duced a bill to tax all property eipa- g< triated through marriage settlements tl made 6n account of such alliances. Mr. McGavin, who is a native of Illi- hi nois, got to Congress by defeating pi Carter H. Harrison's brother. tt "In thinking of these numerous tr weddings," he said, "I wondered in what the early pioneers who battled ei with the Indians, challenged the for- sc est and braved the winter's winds cl and snows to establish a Government w where manhood might be recognized w for its true value, instead of for the E accident of birth, would say if from in their graves they could look back et and see so many of the women of this P< country saclficlng their souls upon tt the altar of snobbery and vice. ai "I have no reference to any particular girl, nor have I prejudice against A all of these titled men, for some of cc them are worthy to grace any home; ai some of them have added to the tt honor of their names and to the sc glory of their countries. I have ref- v? erence only to those who have a mon- tr ocle on their eye and an idiotic look se upon their faces ? those who have tti neither the disposition to be good nor bi the ability to do harm. ci "A bill has been introduced in the m House by one of my colleagues from g( Chicago to levy a tax upon all dow- w rles and upon their titled husbands. I am not here to advocate the passage cr of that bill or to oppose it, but my w curiosity has been aroused to know m to what . committee it might have th been referred. The Committee on m Foreign Relations might do, or the M Committee on Interstate'and Foreign tr Commerce might also be anpropri*1^ er "But on further thought and exr*r.- lo ination I found it had been very prop- M 500 American Girls, W $204,000,01 New York City.?More than 500 ar American girls have married titled U: foreigners, and a careful statistician ] h( has figured that a trifle more than al $204,000,000 has been taken over seas through cupid's influence. This to amount does not include the $12,- of 000,000 fortune of Miss Gladys Van- G< derbilt, who married Count Szech- er enyi, of Hungary. G* But the record of infelicitous in- It ternational marriages is appalling, ui and the divorce court history of the th past-few years teems with the names 0( of titled foreigners who married rich American girls. There are few of it these cases in which the American h< wife'did not bring the shit either for bi separation or divorce. th Some of the matches have been vi love matches, and in these instances, m with few exceptions, the American m wives have been bappy. But these lu FORTUNES WHICH AMERICAN GIRLS Hi TO TITLED F0REIGHERS I r^-- > x ?1 Ann Ann . r>i uucuesb UL mautumct . . ? w>VV> V . Princess Poniatowski 1,000,000 Pi Duchess of Marlborough. .10.000,000 B< Lady Curzon ... . . 5,00.0,000 M Lady Lister-Kaye 1,000,000 M Countess vonPappenheim 1,000,000 D: Princess Colonna 2.500,000 *( Countess Castellane ....17.000,000 Bi Mrs. Geo. CornwalliR West 500,000 L< Lady William Beresford.. 3,000.000 Duchess of Manchester.. . 2,000,000 C( Duchess of Roxburghe. . ..25,000,000 M Countess of Strafford 1,000,000 *1 Princess Auersperg 1,000,000 M Lady Thomas Hesketh.... 1,000,000 Di Mrs. Arthur Paget J2,000,0.00 L? Mrs. Vivian 12,000,000 C( Countess of Craven 1,000,000 C< Countess of Donoughmore 500,000 Oi Baroness de Vriere 500,000 Mrs. Douglass Campbell.. 500,000 M Marchioness de Brereuil.. 2,000,000 C< Princess Vicovaro 1,000,000 Marchioness de San Marzano 1,000,000 ? Countess de Rohan-Chabott 1,000,000 ca Church Will Offer | E Compelling Attractions. Cleveland.?In keeping with the spirit of modern times, the new Win- th dermere Methodist Episcopal Church w will have many innovations. si One of the features will be a social el room, thirty-eight by sixty-eight fest. te There will be spacious rooms for the th trustees, the choir and the pastor, fu while the women of th'* congregation st will have a parlor and work room, a' The church also will contain a gym- se nasium, kitchen and kindergarten. tl The pastor Ls the Rev. N. W. Stroup. m Halls of Congress. The existence of slavery in the Philippines was discussed. G A bill providing for a new immi- as grant station at Philadelphia was passed. of In the Senate an attempt was made ol to have the Harvester Trust investigation called off. or There was a lively tilt between ai Representatives Randcll, of Texas, as and Dalzell, of Pennsylvania. The Senate Commerce Committee fo reported favorably the bill to provide er a revenue cutter for Key West at a U cost of $250,000. b( THAT GLITTERS Hungarian Gonlasb. Jamieson, in the Pittsburg Dispatch. AMERICAN m FOR FOREIGN TITLES :e Their Souls to Snobbery?Auction , Buy Me That!" Girl Says, and It ry Day a Bargain Day In New lbbon or a Pound of Flesh. ply referred to the Ways and Means ommittee, inasmuch as ft sought to jvy a tax. Then I was more curious > know whether the present tariff ihedule included dukes, earls, lords ad counts, and finding that these lings were nowhere mentioned, I lought it might be proper for the jstoms officers to classify them like Qgs' legs, as poultry, for it is the eneral opinion among Americans lat they are a species of geese. "We upon this side of the House ave in recent years referred triumtiantly to the fact that, as between lis and other nations, the balance of ade was in our favor, but nowhere l the summary can be found a referlce to such trades as these, where >iled and frayed nobility is exlanged for a few million dollar* rung from the lambs of Wall Street ith a woman thrown in 'to boot'.' very day seems to be a bargain day i the great city of New York, wheth it be for a yard of ribbon or a >und of flesh; whether it be upon le retail counter of Broadway or the jction block of Fifth avenue. "There was a time when wealthy mericans traveling in Europe were >ntent with buying costly fabrics id paintings by old masters of whom ley knew nothing, but now they buy tmething even more 'costly but less tluable. When the wealthy giris aveling with their parents abroad ie some remnant of royalty they enlusiastically exclrfim, 'Oh, mamma, ly me that.' An interpreter is seired, the bargain is made, the oney is produced, and the girl is >ne?soon to return a sadder but a iser woman. "While I have engaged in some iticism of those particular women ho have made a mockery of the ost sacred relations of life ? of ,ose not satisfied with any other ime than Countess Spaghetti or acaroni?I want to say one word in ibute to those true American womi who spruned the wiles of earls, rds and counts for the love of His. ajesty, an American citizen." it fa 30, Have Wed Titles e the exceptions that prove the rule, nhappiness, shame and ignominy ive come in most of the internationmarriages. The most recent American heiress sue for a divorce was the Countess ' Castellane, who was Miss Anna auld. This was a love match that ided disastrously. And when Miss Duid married the picturesque Boni was confidently believed it was a lion that would bring happiness to e bride. Miss Gould brought $17,)0,000 to her Count. There is a prevalent opinion that is safer for a young American jiress to take up the lion taming isiness and to plunge on the races an to marry a title. The general ew seems to be that with such a arriage she is sure to lose her oney and her happiness, and is cky if she gets off with her life. WE HANDED OVER miDltin I ACT nilADTCD PPNTIIRV uumnu LHJI uuniiii.ii vbMi Vi?a -incess Scey-Montbeliard. 1,000,000 rlncess Hatzfeld 2,000,000 ironess Bocklinson .... 1,000,000 arquis de Choisene 500,000 'Princess Engalitcheff .. 1,000,000 uchess de Dino 2.,000,000 Countess Festitics 2,000,000 ironess de Zedlitz. . . . .. *500,000 idy Gilbert Thomas Carter 3,000,000 juntess von Larisch.... 4,000,000 rs. Michael Henry Herbert 5,000,000 Baroness Halkett 10,000,000 rs. Burke Roche 1,000,000 uchess de Valencay 1,000,000 idy Gordon-Cuming .... 1,000,000 juntess Moltke-Huitfeldt 1,000,000 juntess Yarmouth 1,000,000 tie hundred lesser American heiresses 64,500,000 rs. Colin-Campbell 5,000,000 juntess of Suffolk 5,000.000 Total $204,000,000 * AIrwr\ T.itroa in Phi. ' oiin.c uiiuiwu. ... ^?. LgO. lectrocotion of Animals Painless, Says French Savant. Paris.?Dr. Leduc, a professor at ie School of Medicine, in Nantes, ho has- been experimenting in the aughter houses of that city on the ectrocution of animals by intermitDt low tension currents, claims that ie system is painless, the central inctions of perception being first deroyed and then those of respiration id circulation, and that there is confidently neither suffering nor reacon from the animals thus killed, alciag it better than other methods. The Field of Labor. Nearly SOOO organized women in ermany are employed as printers' ;sistants. Union labor in the leather trades Russia has reacned the number 1 2.0GG. Buffalo (N. Y.) Union of Billposts and Hitlers of America has signed 1 agreement with the theatre manners. During 1906 forty-one of the sixtyur unions affiliated with the Genal Federation of German Trades nions at Berlin paid unemployed >nefits. ' FHEE09D FOR FILIPINO? I PMISEB W PRESIDENT , Roosevelt Sends War Secretary's Report to Congress. a CONDITIONS ARE MUCH BETTER Philippine Products, Taft Thinks, r Should Be Admitted to the Uni- c ted States Duty Free Within C Reasonable Bounds. S Washington, D. C.?To Congress, J land through it to the world at large, J President Roosevelt announces that r it will probably be a generation, it ?. may even be longer, before the Fili- c pinos will be fit for complete selfgovernment and ready to decide whether they shall be independent of | 'American rule. tl j This declaration from the Pre3i- 1< i dent accompanies a special report to ' him hv ffoorpharv Taft unon his re- O cent visit to the Philippines, on the e occasion of their first national assem- E bly, and recording the results of the ti American occupation of the islands S in the nine years sinca the battle oS v jj Manila Bay. Concurring in the Sec- t' retary's conclusions, and his asser- C ' tion that the Filipinos are being well H and economically governed at a pres- A ent cost of not over $5,000,000 a P year, the President says: ^ "No great civilized power has ever b managed with such wisdom and dis- d Interestedness the affairs of a people committed by the accident of war to ti ffa hands. If we had followed the tl . advice of the misguided persons who tl wished us to turn the islands loose E and let them suffer whatever fate might befall them, they would have ci already passed through a complete S and bloody chaos, and would now un- K doubtedly be the possession of some , T other power which there is every rea- r< son to believe would not have done f< as we have done?that is, would not si have striven to teach them how to 0 govern themselves or to have devel- 'i oped them, as we have developed n them, primarily in their own inter i ests. tl ' "Save only our attitude toward a Cuba, I question whether there is a h brighter page in the annals of inter- q national dealing between the strong b and the weak than the page which -11 ^ tells of our doings in the Philippines. ? " ?* ? -i-i ?a o A m 1 r_ 1 ft' 1 cau especial aueuuuu iu mo ? ably clear showing made by: Secre- si tary Taft of the fact that it would h have been equally ruinous if we had tl yielded to the desires of those who c: wished us to go faster in the direc- n tion of giving the Filipinos self-rgov- n ernment, and if we had followed the t( policy advocated by others, who desired us simply to rule the islands p without any thought at all of fitting b them for self-government. o "The islanders have made real ad- d vances in a hopeful direction, and q they have opened well with the new Philippine Assembly; they have yet a a long way to travel before they will 0 be fit for complete self-government w and for deciding, as it will then be C their duty to do, whether this self-1 government shall be accompanied by complete independence. It will probably be a generation, it may even be L longer, before this *>olnt is reached, j but it is most gratifying that such substantial progress toward tms as a e] goal has already been accomplished. p( We desire that it be reached at as early a date as possible, for the sake a J of the Filipinos and for our own sake. a, j But improperly to endeavor to hurry the time will probably mean that e] the goal will not be attained at all." Secretary Taft's recommendations s] to Congress are: b First?That legislation be adopted a by Congress admitting the products of the Philippines to the markets of jg the United States with such reason- g able limitations as may remove fear of interference with the tobacco and sugar interests in the United States. C( Second?That the present restric- 0] tion be removed as to the acquisition of mining claims and the holding of Q lands by corporations in the Philip- y| pines. vj Third?That further, legislation ba e( passed authorizing the Philippine jT Government if It chooses to open and jj conduct an agricultural bank,with a C( capital not exceeding $2,000,000. Fourth ? That the coastwise D laws of the United States be made nermanently inapplicable to the trade | between the ports of the Islands and x the ports of the United States. The Secretary extols President Roosevelt for his Philippine policy, ci which, he declares, is merely the con- o; sistent continuation of that originated tl - by President McKinley. The United ei States, he says, is using every effort N to increase the capacity of the Fill- R pinos to exercise political power. He denies that it was ever McKinley's ct policy merely to await the organization of a Philippine oligarchy or aris- v< tocracy competent to administer gov- S< ernment and then turn the islands th over to it. H si FIGHT "PINK EYE" EPIDEMIC. e? h; Seventy-flve Cases Anion? Midship- t men at Naval Academy. Annapolis, Md.?An epidemic of ,D "pink eye" has broken out among the midshipmen and about seventy, oi live cases have been treated at the P' sick quarters in the last week. The P' affection is not particularly serious in itself, but is likely to lead to grave N eye trouble unless it i3 treated tc promptly. A special characteristic of it is the extreme rapidity with which it spreads. The number of new cases each day is not dcclinlin p as yet. 0( Bank at Pittsburg Closed. The Traders and Mechanics' Bank. oc of Pittsburg, and the Treasury Trrst Company, a subsidiary, occunylng the g same building, were closed by the w State bank examiners. M * Tobacco Factory Attacked. An attempt was made to dynamite and burn the Havea-Sorv regie to- fii bacco factory at Clarksville, Tenn.: tl the guards killed two negroes and fr wounded another. A Women in the Day's News. Mrs. Eliza Allen, of Augusta, Me., who is fifty, was a great grandmother ol at forty-nine. tt Mrs. Theodore W. Birney, founder kl of Mothers' Congress, died in Washington, D. C. Under the circular issued by tho State Department Mme. Gould, as the Ic divorced wife of a Frenchman, haa tc i the option of resuming her American citizenship within one "ear. Mme. Tinayre, the ..oted novelist, of Paris, regrets that she scoffcd afl 01 her proposed enrolment in the Legion 1 pi of Honor. I ol iSiODyiK TO BOSTON rakes Up Abode in $200,000 House in Brookline. / lakes Trip From Concord With Party of Christian Scientists in Special Train, With Pilot. Boston.?For the ostensible pur lose of being near the "mother hurch" in Boston Mrs. Mary Baker Eddy, head of the Christian Icience Church, deserted Pleasant riew, her home in Concord, N. H., > or many years, and moved to Brookine, Mass., where she will spend the emainder of her clays in the splendid 200,000'Lawrence house, in thejj Ihestnut Hill region. Accompanied by about fifty of her earest workers Mrs. Eddy came to trookline in a special train of three ars with a pilot engine preceding he train and another locomotivo foljwing. The trip was made over a circultus route in order that the aged leadr r would not have\to pass through lAofAn TKa fn In ran tn T.nwo11 an IUOVV/U, XUV UH.1U vv v?? V/U be Boston and Maine, thence to outh Framingham on the New Haen, thence to Riverside on the Bos- < on and Albany and then to tho j Ihestnut Hill station over the Brookne circuit of the Boston and Albany, .rriving at Chestnut Hill the entire arty took carriages which were ip raiting and drove to the Lawrence ouse, where Mrs. Eddy took up he* ' omiclle at 4.45 o'clock p. m. Alfred Parlew, head of the Christ [an Science press agency, gave out lie following statemeut concerning tie sudden transfer of Mrs. Eddy to irookline: "The Rev. Mary Baker Eddy, dis> Dverer and founder of Christian cience, has moved from Concord. N. [., to Brookline, a suburb of Boston, he Lawrence estate, which has been imodeled, has been quietly furnished )r Mrs. Eddy and her household and he occupied it about 4.45 o'clock, nly a very few of Mrs. Eddy's riends knew of her contemplated love. ' ( "At Mrs. Eddy's new home everybiing was found in full equipment nd supDer was served at the usual our. Except for the three hours reuired to make the trip there was nol reak in the usual routine of the fam-Jy. "This move was not prompted byj ny sudden decision. It is known ta ime of. Mrs. Eddy's friends that sh.o as been considering for some years le advisability of returning to this Ity, her purpose to be more conveient to the mother church of the deomination, nearer to its headquarJrs. | "The whole affair, including the reparation of the house, was in eeping with Mrs. Eddy's usual way f doing things. She weighs matters eliberately and carefully, then acts uickly." Since early last October a force of bout 300 men has been workiug vertime on the Lawrence house, rhich is not far from the Country lub at Clyde Park. MODEL LICENSE ADOPTED. eague Meeting at Louisville Proposes New Form For Restriction. Louisville, Ky.?After long conferace the Model License League, comosed of prominent men the country iron intorostoH in tho manufaefcura ad'sale of spirltous and malt liquors, lopted the following as the text of a model license law" for the considratlon of the public: "That all licenses cow in existence lall renew themselves so long as the usiness of retailing liquors is periltted in a State or a locality. "That no more licenses shall be sued until the proportion is not reater than one for each 500 popuition. "That licenses shall not be so ex;ssive in price as to destroy the value C retailers' business. ' "That all licenses shall be In the ature of contracts between the indiidual and the State and shall proIde that where the holder is convictJ Tirll#111 TrlnTof)nn r\f onv lftTXf -A VI J/UO nmu* Tivtavivu vi. W.u<; .. i connection with his business his cense shall be suspended or can* ?lled." IPHTHERIA IN REFORMATORY. 1 wenty-onc Inmates Stricken in Rahway, N. J., With Disease. Rahway, N. J.?With 540 prisoners owded into quarters intended lor nly 355, an epidemic of diphtheria lat threatens to sweep through the ltlre institution has appeared in the ew Jersey State Reformatory, at ahway. Already there are twenty-ono ises of the disease among the inlates, and new cases have been dejloping at the rate of one a day. d serious has the situation become lat the New Jersey State Board of ealth has despatched its o\yn phycian to aid in combating the disise, and the reformatory workshops ave been closed to bo turned into imporary hospitals. Lack of facilities for isolating the ifected patients and the close conict with one another that the prisaers are compelled to endure comlicate the situation and make the roblem one of the most difficult, om a medical viewpoint, that th?? ew Jersey authorities have ever had > cope with. Fire in Portland, Maine. Fire in the business district ot ortland, Me., caused a loss of $800,)0, with insurance of $708,000. Battleship Nebraska's Practice. The battleship Nebraska, under >mmand of Captain Nicholson, sailed om San Francisco for Magdalsna I ay for her first target practice. She ill join Admiral Evans' fleet in arch. $1000 For Army Overcoat. George Meier, of Baltimore, paid a ae of $1000 after pleading guilty to le charge of receiving an overcoat om a soldier of the United Stat33^ rmy. Drink Victim's Suicide. Declaring that drink was the curse ! his life, W. C. Belford, manager of ie gas company at Hampton, Va., [lied himseii. ^ President Oler's Ice Famine. President Oler. or the American | :e Company, declares it is too early ? raise a famine cry. Exchange in Pittsburg Reopens. The Pittsburg Stock Exchange re> iiened for business following a susinsion of three months, on account ' the recent financial flurry. ' f I I Sy. . ; 'V/-''. ' * HOUSE wnnir if Villi ? Thousands of American women In our homes are daily sacrificing their lives to duty. In order to keep tlie home neat and pretty, the children vfell dressed and tidy, women overdo. A female weakness or displacement is often brought on and they suffer in silence, , ^ drifting alone from bad to worse, knowing well that they ought to have heli> to overcome the pains and aches which daily make life a burden. It is to these faithful women that LYDIAE. PIN KH AIM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND comes as a boon and a blessing. as it did to Mrs. F. Ellsworth, of Maynlle, N. Y., and to Mrs. W. P. . Boyd,of Beaver Falls, Pa^ who says "I was not able to do my own work, owing to the female tronble from which I suffered. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegatable Compound helped me wonderfully, ?j and I am so well that I can do as big ? day's work as I ever did.- I wish every '( Bick woman would try It. , FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousandsaf women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bearmg-down feeling, flatulency, indices- f.'i ition,dizziness,or nervous prostration. Why dont you try it ? ' - Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has euided thousands to hepJ*>- Address. Lynn. Mass. nDHDQY new discoviky; <0 I giVMnniokr?li?f aBdoaxw buDmerging ?jigm v iuu^cs u > Drinking Fountain. The new Ashokan Reservoir In the \ Catsklll Mountain region will yield v 7 New York City, when completed, something like 500,000,000 gallons of drinking-water per day. It will involve the submerging of eight villages and will extend over an area equivalent to that of Manhattan Island, ranging In depth from a' mere ' ripple to 220 feet, and containing a ' body of water estimated at 120,000,000,000 gallons. Some etlreraely interesting facts concerning tbls huge new water-supply for the metropolis are contained in an artacle in the current Harper's Weekly. It Is written with a wealth pt picturesque! and atrikJne detail by William Inglls. ? ? w _ _ ^ Mr. iDglls visited the region accom-1 panied by Vernon Howe Bailey, the artist, who has illustrated the article with numerous delightful sketches. The total cost of the Ashokan and its allied reservoirs will aggregate $162,000,000. . Early Croziers. The earliest mention that is so far disclosed of the use of a crozier is of one carried by Ataldus, Archbif hop of Reims, who died A. D. 933. An ancient Saxon or Norman font in Winchester Cathedral has a very pld representation of a Bishop with a crozier, probably the earliest example to be found in England. A crozier of rude '< shape is cut on the tomb of Bartholomew, Bishop of Exeter from 1161 ta 1184.?Wood Craft. rvwjfiv Coal in Bolivia. In a recent ar. in the Street Railway Journal on "Transportation Facilities in South America," it is stated that transportation is so difficult over the mountains that the coal imported into Bolivia for the railway's own use costs about ?6 per -? ton. At La Paz abundant timber. grows within fifty >\ js from the "" mountains, but transportation is so difficult that trolley poles and lumber ' for building operations are brought from Oregon, a distance of thousands of miles.?Engineer. CUBS' FOOD They Thrive On Grape-Nuts. Healthy babies don't cry, and the well-nourished baby that is fed on Grape-Nuts is never a crying baby. Many babies who cannot take any other food relish the perfect food, Grape-Nuts, and get well. "My little baby was given up by three doctors, who said that the con densed milk on which I had rea ner had ruined the child's stomach. One of the doctors told me that the only thing to do would be to try GrapeNuts, so I got some and prepared It as follows: I soaked 1% tablespoonfuls in one pint of cold water for half an hour, then I strained off the liquid and mixed 12 teaspoonfuls of this strained Grape-Nuts juice with six teaspoonfuls of rich milk, put In a pinch of salt and a little sugar, warmed it and gave it to baby every twp hours. 'In this simple, easy way I saved baby's life and have built her up to a strong, healthy child, rosy and laughing. The food must certainly be perfect to have such a wonderful effect as this. I can truthfully say I think it is the best food in the world to raise delicate babies on, and Is also a delicious, healthful food for grown ups, as we have discovered in our family." Grape-Nuts is equally valuable to the strong, healthy man or woman. ^ It stands for the true theory of ^ health. "There's a Reason." Read "The Road to Wellville," in pkga. i